For those crime and mystery readers who enjoy becoming more familiar with another country and its culture through the forum of crime fiction like myself, then Femi Kayode is a superb author to introduce you to Nigeria. The central protagonist is not a police officer or private investigator, Dr Philip Taiwo is a academic, a psychological investigator, who specialises in the harrowing field of crowd killings, a man who has been living and working in the United States, who has recently returned home to Lagos, Nigeria with his family, a move instigated by his wife, Folake. Having felt like an outsider in the US, he is surprised to find he is now seen as an outsider, an Americano, at home. He is asked by the Managing Director of the third largest bank, Chiemeka Nwamadi, to find the truth of the killing of his son, Kevin, one of the Okriti 3, 3 young students viewed as thieves and murdered by a crowd 2 years ago.
The public executions were captured by numerous digital witnesses, uploading their videos onto social media platforms. Persuaded by his influential father and feeling the need for space from his wife, Philip flies to Port Harcourt, meeting Salome Briggs on the plane, and picked up by his driver, Chika Makuochi, at the airport. It doesn't take long for Philip to see that Chika has skills beyond driving, giving him valuable assistance in his task, whilst simultaneously providing him with local knowledge and understanding of a culture that he is severely lacking. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the local community in Okriti are less than welcoming of another outsider coming to cast their judgement on an event where they were merely dispensing justifiable justice, everyone wants to forget it and move on, and this includes the local police, who claim the case is now closed with the arrests and upcoming trial of 7 people. In a narrative where Okriti palpably exudes increasing tensions, violence and volatility, it takes Philip a little time to understand just how much danger he and Chika are in.
Kayode paints an authentic depiction of Nigerian culture, moving seamlessly from the worlds of extreme wealth and luxury and the poverty, so often accompanied by the lack of opportunities, electricity and infrastructure, and the everyday norms where the military regularly create roadblocks for the purpose of collecting bribes from drivers. Additionally, it provides an insightful picture of its troubling history, such as the terrors of the Biafran civil war, and the curse of the discovery of oil, in the wake of which came murders, devastating destruction of the land, horrifying brutality and violence. This is high quality, smart, complex and engaging crime fiction which focuses on critical issues, such as the problems of social media, reflecting the contemporary global social realities of people’s machinations in sowing discord and divisions for their own agendas, by manipulating facts or spreading lies. There is a fascinating central protagonist in Dr Philip Taiwo, and I think this novel is likely to appeal to many crime fiction readers, and one which I hope will turn out to be a series. Many thanks to Bloomsbury for an ARC.